The sum and multiplication of periodic functions

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Homework Help Overview

The original poster questions whether the sum and multiplication of two periodic functions, which share a common period, remain periodic. The functions are defined from the reals to the reals.

Discussion Character

  • Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • The original poster attempts to demonstrate that the sum of two periodic functions is also periodic by using their definitions. Some participants question the implications when the functions have different periods and explore the concept of least common multiples in this context.

Discussion Status

Participants have engaged in clarifying the conditions under which the sum of periodic functions remains periodic, particularly focusing on the implications of differing periods. There is an ongoing inquiry into the nature of almost periodic functions, with references to external resources for further exploration.

Contextual Notes

There is mention of potential complications arising from the functions having different periods, particularly when the ratio of the periods is not a rational number. The discussion also touches on the concept of almost periodic functions, which has not been fully explored within the thread.

life is maths
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Homework Statement



Hi, my question is whether the sum and multiplication of two periodic functions (with a common period) are periodic.
Our functions are R\rightarrowR.

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution


f(x)=f(x+T) g(x)=g(x+T) T is the period.
h(x)=f(x)+g(x)
h(x+T)=f(x+T)+g(x+T)=f(x)+g(x)=h(x)

Hence, h(x) is also periodic.
What I did is similar for multiplication. Is there any flaw in this? I searched a bit and found out this may not hold every time, but I guess that was about Fourier series, which I have no idea about.
Thanks for any hint :)

 
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Your argument is fine. You only potentially run into difficulties when the periods aren't the same.
 
Thanks, LCKurtz. Could you please explain what happens if the periods are not the same? Is it too complicated for a freshman in maths? :)
 
life is maths said:
Thanks, LCKurtz. Could you please explain what happens if the periods are not the same? Is it too complicated for a freshman in maths? :)

If you have periods like 2 and 3, then you need to use the least common multiple for the period of the sum. But if your two periods are 2 and \pi, there is no lcm and the sum isn't periodic at all. That happens when the ratio of the periods isn't a rational number.
 
Thanks again :) Wow, I haven't thought of it before...
One last question, if you don't mind me :) What is an almost periodic function? It is a term I came across today, and would be grateful if you could explain this, too.
 
life is maths said:
Thanks again :) Wow, I haven't thought of it before...
One last question, if you don't mind me :) What is an almost periodic function? It is a term I came across today, and would be grateful if you could explain this, too.

You can read about that here:
http://planetmath.org/encyclopedia/AlmostPeriodicFunction.html

and other links you can find with Google.
 
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